2. Takeaways From Today
Why storytelling is so vital to a
successful nonprofit marketing
& fundraising strategy
How to use digital tools to tell
your nonprofit’s story
How to make your message
stand out and cut through the
clutter and noise
How to use video-sharing tools
to connect with supporters
4. Why Storytelling?
People don’t
remember bullet
points.
People respond to
emotion.
Feelings, not
analytical thinking,
drive donations.
5. Why Storytelling?
Stories help you
express your mission
to the lay person.
Statistics might shock
and awe, but they will
rarely get people to
take action.
7. What Storytelling Will Not Do
Fix bad management.
Fix a lousy program or service.
Replace other marketing
strategies.
Replace fundraising tactics like
direct asks and one-on-one
meetings.
BUT if done well, it will
augment all other
communication efforts!
8. How To “Do” Storytelling?
Think of your audience.
How can you tell a story in a way that will
resonate with them?
What is important to them?
Resource:
http://storytellersforgood.com/videos/
9. How To “Do” Storytelling?
Stories have a trajectory.
They do not need to be
candy-coated and positive –
they need to be authentic.
Ideas for stories: This is how
we started, this is who we are
today, this is where we’re
going, this is how we have
been challenged along the
way
10. Mindset Shift
Storytelling requires an
entire change of mindset.
Most nonprofit
communications are
boring, not compelling
and easy to ignore.
Why is this? How can we
change this?
11. Don’t Ignore the Data
Stories alone are not enough.
You must be able to back up what you are
doing or show that this is a real problem.
12.
13. Types of Stories
Value Stories
The core values of
your nonprofit
Why you do what you
do
What are you
passionate about?
Reference: http://www.thegoodmancenter.com
14. Value Stories
Example – The Robin Hood Foundation
http://www.robinhood.org/about
The video starts out immediately with people
who have been helped – you immediately
connect with them.
Offer “social proof” – Geoffrey Canada;
Chairman & CEO Of Goldman Sachs
Efficient, effective – 100% charity
Students proudly saying where they are going to
college
15. Types of Stories
Creation Stories
The why and the how of
your organization
What is the need
Story of the founders
The real WHY you exist
Reference: http://www.thegoodmancenter.com
16. Creation Stories
Example –Environmental
Defense Fund
Started by a small group of
passionate conservationists in
Long Island.
They wanted to save the osprey, bald
eagle and peregrine falcon.
Went to court, got a ban on DDT in
1966. In 1972, they played a large role
on a nationwide ban.
They play up the “strong foundation”
and grassroots approach which
informs their work today.
17. Types of Stories
“Striving to Improve”
Stories
Express resiliency
Show that your org is
always trying to improve
Mistakes, lessons learned
Helps other organizations
Reference: http://www.thegoodmancenter.com
18. Types of Stories
Example – The Denver Foundation
10 Years 10 Stories – Celebrating 10 years of
inclusiveness
Stories from the Journey – stories told by the
nonprofits awarded grants
Nonprofits discussed what they learned and
what they still have to work on.
Focused on their target audience and thought
about what would resonate with them.
19. Stories Should Cover:
The WHY: Your cause and the lives you are changing
The HOW: Your programs and services.
The WHAT: The impact you are having on the world
20. Where To Find Them?
Everywhere!
Everyone is responsible!
Cannot exist in a silo
Is not just the marketing
or development
department’s job!!!!
Get on the front lines
21. Everyone Has A Story
Everyone has a
story – it
might not be
one that you
can use, but it
might lead
you to an idea
or person who
can help.
22. Casey Hibbard, Stories That Sell
“Praise” letters – talk with the submitter,
collect more details
Ask clients – include a “share your story” page
on your website, conduct surveys, ask at live
events
Stay positive
Keep it varied – Make A Wish Foundation
doesn’t just tell about the people that benefit,
they also tell the stories of the wish-granter, the
volunteers and their sponsors.
24. Bay Area’s Committee on the
Shelterless (COTS)
Video of a man whose life was saved by COTS
No multiple takes or tricky editing
He’s talking to an audience, live
25. The Lazarex Cancer Foundation
The Bracelet Story – one couple that helps Lazarex
through fundraising because the organization
helped their son
26. Per Scholas
IT professional job training organization – free
tech education to unemployed & low-income
adults
28. Conservation International
“If it's raining where you are, the ocean played a role. If
you drove to work, the seas are absorbing the carbon
dioxide from your car. If you ordered seafood for lunch, it
may have traveled halfway around the world to land on
your plate.
No matter where you live on Earth, what you do affects the
ocean — and what happens to the ocean affects you.”
29. Mine The Gold
“Think of the story itself as gold. You mine the gold,
capture the story.
Then you bring it back to your office and you need to
pound that gold into different shapes and sizes
depending on whom you’re talking to, or also
where you’re telling it.” ~ Andy Goodman
30. Getting Started
Have a system.
Collecting stories and story ideas.
Capture and save your stories – Story Bank
Dropbox, Google Docs, Basecamp
Whatever you use – make sure it is accessible
Social Media Committee – story witnesses
Figure out a way to start thinking through this
lensiPhones, tablets, anyone can be a reporter
31. Getting Started
Define goals.
What are your priorities?
Program development &
fundraising – structure
around those stories
Getting on social media is
not a strategy!
32. Getting Started
Empower others.
You cannot do it alone. Period.
Hold a staff meeting to train on storytelling.
Change the culture – have an email listserv
or start staff meetings with an
exchange of stories.
33. Think Like A Journalist
You are a media organization.
You need to be writers,
publishers, photographers,
videographers
It’s not about your
organization, it’s about what
you are doing in terms of
impacting the world.
Use different platforms
depending.
34. Channels for Storytelling
Website
Blogs
Email newsletters
Publications
Social media
Public speaking, community education
User-generated – how can you encourage your
online community to share their stories?
35. Go Multichannel
Don’t put all your eggs in
one basket!
Be where your supporters
are, not where you want
them to be.
Be consistent in your
brand and in your story
– you don’t have to tell
the exact same story
across channels.
36. Use Video
Think about stories that are shareable.
Don’t say too many things!!! Simple is better.
1-2 minutes, lose viewers every 10-20 seconds
How will you visually tell your story?
Who will guide the narrative?
37. Use Video
Beginning – What’s at stake? The before
(“I was homeless”)
Middle – What has changed?
End – What does the future look like?
Call to Action
What will the viewer be
compelled to do?
38. “Break the Fourth Wall”
Create a candid “making of” video for a
fundraising, advocacy or awareness campaign you
are launching.
Take a tip from Wikipedia and live broadcast the
results of your fundraising campaigns and the
decisions you are making based on those results.
Resource: Alia McKee, Sea Change Strategies,
http://seachangestrategies.com/ferris-bueller-trick-break-fourth-wall-
unpredictably/
39. “Break the Fourth Wall”
Develop a “Why I Do This Work” video series that
shows why your staff have dedicated their lives the
cause.
Create a fun photo board of staff desks — including
those in both exotic and not-so-exotic locations.
The idea is to push beyond traditional direct
marketing techniques to show a more relatable,
identifiable you.
Resource: Alia McKee, Sea Change Strategies, http://seachangestrategies.com/ferris-
bueller-trick-break-fourth-wall-unpredictably/
40. Promote Your Story
Using influencers
Using Online Brand
Ambassadors
Partnership with other
organizations,
companies, businesses
– “Brandscaping”
Bloggers
Celebrities
41. What Makes Stories Memorable?
From “Made to Stick” by Dan
and Chip Heath
1) SIMPLE
2) Unexpected
3) Concrete
4) Credible
5) Emotional
42. Common Mistakes
Using only data. Facts
are not a story!
No reason for the story –
it’s not clearly stated in
the beginning.
No context.
No protagonist.
43. Common Mistakes
Thinking that slick video production = great
story.
Silo-ing the storytellers.
Thinking it’s a one time deal.
44. In Conclusion…
For nonprofits especially, storytelling through pictures
and videos is KEY to communicating your mission!
45. In Conclusion…
Always about the WHY
– not the what you do or
how you do it.
Be authentic.
Be credible.
Get over your fear.
Figure out ways to
measure your success.
46. Resources
The Starter Guide to Nonprofit Video Storytelling (free
download): http://www.startstorytelling.com/
Nonprofit Storytelling for Crowdfunding & Online Fundraising:
http://www.causevox.com/nonprofit-storytelling-crowdfunding/
DoGooder Awards:
http://www.youtube.com/user/nonprofitvideoawards
TechSoup Digital Storytelling Challenge:
http://www.techsoup.org/community/community-
initiatives/techsoup-digital-storytelling
SocialBrite: http://www.socialbrite.org/sharing-center/media/
Nancy Schwartz – Getting Attention:
http://gettingattention.org/2012/11/nonprofit-communications-
fail/
47. Questions? Feedback?
Tweet questions or post them on our Facebook Wall:
http://www.facebook.com/nonprofitsmatter
http://www.nonprofitsmatter.org
Thank you!